A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Thursday. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)

(Newser)
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The markets have closed on a brutal day, with US stocks joining what MarketWatch characterizes as a global selloff. At one point, the Dow was down more than 500 points, though it rebounded in the final hour. The Wall Street Journal notes that yields on 10-year Treasuries are at 1940s levels as investors seek safety. The numbers:

Dow: Falls 391 (3.5%) to 10,734

Nasdaq: Falls 83 (3.3%) to 2,456

S&P 500: Falls 37 (3.2%) to 1,130

Most accounts blame some combination of worries about Europe (particularly Italy) and the Fed's not-so-rosy outlook yesterday. But Felix Salmon at Reuters warns against such neat and tidy explanations. "Let’s not kid ourselves that there’s any particular reason why global stocks are falling," he writes. "As a general rule, if you see 'fears' or 'pessimism' in a market-report headline, that’s code for 'the market fell and we don’t know why,' or alternatively 'the market is volatile and yet we feel the need to impose some spurious causality onto it.'" What's worse, such "erroneous" accounts just feed into media hysteria, he adds.

"What's worse, such "erroneous" accounts just feed into media hysteria, he adds." I'm curious at what point we start really truly holding the media accountable for using fatalist and incendiary language that actively (and fruitlessly) hurts consumer confidence. I'm not saying they should lie in the opposite direction, but it feels a bit like yelling fire in a movie theature at this point...

Mia

Sep 22, 2011 3:21 PM CDT

This is not a dive. This is a slow sink...if this is bad then when GWB was in office we were drowned at the bottom of the lake